The Israel Tax authority announced Tuesday that it would recognize some of the fires that spread across Israel as politically motivated arson, paving the way for victims in those areas to receive compensation for lost property and damages.

The tax authority said that its consideration was based on information from police and rescue services that suggested that several of the fires were indeed caused by politically motivatedarson.

According to the tax authority, residents will receive compensation in the town of Tal El, east of Acre, as well as Zikron Ya'akov, just north of Caesarea, the West Bank settlement of Dolev, the northern town of Gilon, just west of Carmiel, the West Bank settlement of Talmon, Haifa, Nirit, Nataf, and the West Bank settlement of Halamish. (TheMarker)

Since the wave of fires hit Israel last week, the Israel Air Force has utilized several unmanned aerial vehicles to conduct reconnaissance flights across the country, among them its Shoval and Eitan drones.

Touring the Halamish settlement in the West Bank, where dozens of home were damaged in the blazes in recent days, Defense Minister Avigdor Lieberman said on Sunday, “It appears that there have been 334 hours of reconnaissance work by means of drones, gliders and the like.”

Dozens of senior police officers arrived for a team-building event at a luxury hotel in Tel Aviv Thursday while at the same time tens of thousands of families in Haifa were evacuating their homes due to the fires. Station commanders and regional commanders from all over the country attended the event at the Dan Panorama Hotel, which was booked before the fires started, but was not canceled in their wake.

Is a fire started intentionally for political, or “nationalist,” motives worth more than an ordinary fire? Will the criteria for government compensation to Israeli citizens whose homes were damaged last week be set based on the source of the flames, creating a hierarchy of reparations and assistance?

Will a fire classified as a hostile terrorist act provide its victims with faster and higher reimbursement than those unfortunates whose houses, photo albums and computers were consumed by a fire caused by a police flare or a carelessly discarded cigarette whose combustion was fanned by the winds?

Israeli police have arrested six teens from the town of Jadeidi-Makr on suspicion of starting a fire at Achihood Forest in the Upper Galilee. Police alerted to the scene found the group arriving from the direction of the fire, which was quickly extinguished. (Jack Khoury)

Police releases a Bedouin activist who was arrested on Thursday on suspicion of inciting to arson because of a satirical Facebook post. The police's decision to release Abudaabes came only a few hours after they had asked the Be'er Sheva District Court to deny his appeal of a lower court decision.

"The police should stop using Google Translate," Knesset member Osama Saadia (Joint List), who accompanied Abudaabes in court in Be'er Sheva, said.

A senior police official told Haaretz Sunday that up to this point 30 suspects have been arrested on arson charges, 23 of them were remanded in custody. He could not say how many of those arrested were politically motivated. According to the same source, 20 of those arrested were Israeli-Arabs.

Out of the over 90 fires that broke out in the past week, the police said it suspects arson in 40. The police source explained that in fires that broke out in several points at the same time there is likelihood that the fire was started by an arsonist. The senior official said that in some places flammable substances were discovered. According to the source, those arrested are suspected of causing 15 of the fires.

The source could not say how many of those arrested were caught with flammable materials. According to him some of the cases against the suspects are based on circumstantial evidence, while others are based substantial evidence. The police explained that the investigation of arson is very complicated, since often the evidence is consumed by fire. (Yaniv Kubovich)

Israeli President Reuven Rivlin spoke on the telephone Sunday with Turkish President Recip Tayyep Erdogan and thanked him for the aid Turkey provided in fighting the wave of fires in Israel.

Rivlin told Erdogan he met the Turkish pilots who came to fight the fires on Sunday, the President's Office said. "They are doing wonderful work and we very much appreciate what they are doing," said Rivlin.

"I would like to thank you from the depths of my heart for your decision to send us aid that we needed in fighting the fires. With their bravery and abilities, your pilots helped us greatly," said Rivlin.

Erdogan thanked Rivlin and said that as soon as he learned of the spreading fires he asked to send helicopters and crew to help, and he hoped and prayed the operation would end in the best possible way.

Erdogan said the two countries were in the midst of a process of renewing their relations and the new Turkish ambassador to Israel would begin work soon. Normalization of relations between Turkey and Israel is of great importance to the entire region, he said. I know we can continue to cooperate on natural gas matter, and the talks between the two energy ministries will bear fruit, said Erdogan.

The supertanker plane flown over from the United States on Friday in order to assist in the extinguishing of the fires, was flying, seemingly aimlessly, over Haifa for 2 and a half hours, an area where no fires were burning.

The plane, a Boing 747 adapted to serve as a firefighting plane, has been circling for several hours, since taking off at Ben Gurion Airport at 1:40 PM. Assuming that the plane is returned to the U.S. on Monday or Tuesday, and that the fees for its use are marked up at the same rate they have been over recent years, Israel will pay for the plane between 5 to 6 million NIS (about $1.5 million).

Since the government decided to use the supertanker, senior officials in the firefighting service have been claiming that it wasn't needed. According to seniors in the service, no professional evaluation was made in the firefighting service to determine whether it was needed or not. "There is no operational rational here. We are working in an urban environment. The smaller planes are far more efficient for this kind of work," a senior official in the firefighter service told Haaretz over the weekend. Another official added "What we have here is more a matter of politics than operational necessity. We weren't given an opportunity to express our opinion on the matter."

The police said that "The supertanker is operated in aerial alert in order to provide an immediate response to any large fire that is identified when the time comes or to take preventative action. The rate in which fires developed under the weather of the past few days was very rapid. That is why immediate response is needed." In addition the police said that "Most of the fires in recent days developed in the early afternoon, when the eastern wind strengthens. After sundown it was difficult to put these fires out since the firefighting planes are not equipped to work after dark. In the next hour the plane will conduct preventative action in the Ein Hod area."

The plane did eventually fly over Ein Hod for 10 minutes, and then landed. (Noa Spiegel and Yaniv Kubovich)

An Israeli from central Israel was arrested on Sunday on incitement charges after he posted a post on social media calling for revenge against Arabs, whom he accused of the spate of fires in recent days.

"Just burn Arab villages back. This is war, for all leftists that believe in peace know that the Palestinian Authority is gleefully calling to burn more of our places," the man wrote.

He admitted that he indeed posted the statement and was remanded under limiting conditions. (Yaniv Kubovich)

The Be'er Sheva District Court rejected Sunday the appeal of Anas Abudaabes, who was arrested on Thursday on charges that he incited to violence or terrorism, following to Facebook posts he published. He has been contending that the post was cynical.

Judge Amit Cohen ruled that Abudaabes, 29, will remain in custody at least until Monday.

The police's representative in the proceeding, Chief Inspector Oren Bar Yehosua, claimed that Abudaabes was asked to provide his cellphone's passcode three times but kept providing an erroneous passcode, which is hindering the investigation. "The police will not be deterred by the pressure of the media, opinion writers or politicians. We want to work on the actual case, and if it is proven that the plaintiff is innocent, we will be the first to reach this conclusion – but direct actions need to be taken," he said.

Judge Cohen stated in his ruling that the translation of Abudaabes's Facebook posts submitted by the police were different from those submitted by Abudaabes's attorney, so that the first translation supports the police's claim that it constituted incitement, while the latter supported the claim that the post was cynical. The judge further said that the post was written in very harsh language and gave examples of this. "There is no doubt that the plaintiff's claim that the post was written cynically needs to be looked into – but this isn't the right stage to do so, rather this should be done in the main proceeding," he wrote. (Almog Ben Zikri)

MK DR. Basel Ghattas (Joint List) contacted Attorney General Avichai Mandelblit and Minister of Public Security Gilad Erdan, on Sunday, and asked that they instruct the police to investigate Jewish Israeli citizens, who have called for burning down Arab towns on social media, so that they may be brought up on incitement charges.

"To my dismay and surprise the social networks are teeming with racist calls of incitement against Arabs and calls and incitement to take action and burn Arab towns and cities," Ghattas wrote. "The minister of public security had already, on the first day of the fires, instructed the police to investigate and arrest immediately Arab inciters… I haven't heard a similar statement by the minister to the racist inciters filling up the web on the other side." (Jonathan Lis)

Firefighters have taken control over the fire raging at the Zikhron Ya'akov shopping center, by Route 4. The Firefighters on the scene believe that the fire also consumed asbestos, an extremely harmful substance. No injuries were reported. The police said that due to the blaze, a portion of the shopping center was evacuated, train traffic nearby was temporarily stopped for several minutes. Route 4 is congested going south.

Earlier, a fire broke out in Haruvit Forest, near Kiryat Malakhi. Firefighting planes and police officers were called in, and these obtained control of the fire. The cause of the fire is being investigated.

In remarks at the weekly cabinet session, Netanyahu said the spate of wild fires was not quite over citing reports of another blaze in Zichron Yaacov, where homes were destroyed in blazes last week.

Netanyahu said he had pledged while on a visit to Haifa "we will cut the bureaucracy and help rebuild as soon as possible."

"We will help you rebuild your homes," he said.

Netanyahu praised Israeli firefighters for quelling blazes he said were much more complicated than the deadlier Carmel fire of six years ago in which 44 people perished.

Habayit Hayehudi MK Nissan Slomiansky, chairman of the Knesset Law Committee, introduced a bill to set a minimum punishment of three years for arson, and permit the courts to levy a punitive fine as well. (Noa Shpigel)

Haifa viewed on November 25, 2016 through the remains of a house destroyed by fire.
Ariel Schalit/AP

Defense Minister Avigdor Lieberman said on a visit to Halamish that at least 17 of the fires of the past few days were definitely caused by arson.

However, he did not say which of the fires were deliberately ignited.

"Regarding the data as reported by the head of central command, in this last wave there were 100 fires, and in 17 cases we can say with certainty they were caused by arson. And we are still checking additional cases," Lieberman said.

Lieberman said that the best answer is to "expand settlements." (Read more)

Sources involved in the investigation said several firebombs were found in the area of the settlement and it appears that they were what caused the flames that damaged or destroyed 17 homes and damaged dozens of others.

But nobody in custody is suspected of involvement in the fires in Halamish.

Security forces say they have no documentation of arson taking place in the settlement, and that it seems the only evidence are the remains of bottles (from the firebombs). Firefighters say the fire was set in two spots. (Yotam Berger)

Bennett vows to build more settlerment homes in response to 'pyro-terrorism'; Court to extend detentions of four arson suspects;

Education Minister Naftali Bennett said on Sunday Israel would built "more and bigger homes" in the West Bank settlement of Halamish where fires blamed on arsonists damaged 15 homes. (Read more)

In the meantime, trailer homes would be provided for settlers whose homes are too damaged to live in, the minister said.

No suspects were in custody for the fires in Halamish.

When asked to comment on the assistance of Palestinian firefighters in putting out the blazes, Bennett replied: "We see mutual help on the part of much of the Israeli public."

Four Israelis suspected of arson faced the possibility of extended detention on Sunday.

A court in Acre will hear the cases against four suspects from Deir el Hanna in Galilee, aged 17, 21 and 22, accused of setting a brush fire on Friday. A court in Tiberias will hear the case of a 22-year-old from Kafr Kana, in the Nazareth area, suspected of starting a fire in a wooded area in lower Galilee. (Noa Shpigel, Yotam Berger)

A firefighter extinguishes a blaze in Nataf, a community near Jerusalem, on November 26, 2016.
Ahmad Gharabli/AFP

Israel’s five days of fires have burned more than 20,000 dunams (5,000 acres) of forest, brushland and other open space, a similar scope as the record 2010 Carmel fire, the Jewish National Fund and the Israel Nature and Parks Authority said Saturday.

In the 2010 fire that racked Haifa’s forest, about 25,000 dunams were damaged. This year more than half the damage was done to forests. (Zafrir Rinat)

Israel Police is withholding information regarding the specific allegations against more than half of the suspected arsonists it is currently holding, as well as their legal status, even though no gag order has been issued. According to the information released about several suspects, which allegedly links them to blazes in Arab communities, it appears the alleged actions are unlikely to be politically motivated.

According to the police, 23 people are currently under arrest in relation to the fires, after seven have been released. The police released basic details regarding only 10 of them, all allegedly involved in minor fires and not in the larger blazes like those outside Jerusalem, Zichron Ya'akov or Haifa.

In the known cases, the circumstances raise questions over the political motivation ascribed to the suspected arsonists. In one case, a Nazareth resident whose arrest has been extended is suspected of arson in his Arab-majority city. In another case, two are suspected of starting a brush fire between Sajur and Beit Jann, both of which are Arab communities.

From the details relayed to the media, it's unclear what the remaining 13 are suspected of, whether or not they've been brought before a judge, or if the court ordered their release.

The Israeli army is boosting troop deployment in the West Bank in order to apprehend suspected Palestinian arsonists. Two commando companies from the Maglan and Egoz units will join the forces already deployed in the area, along with reconnaissance teams meant to spot suspects in the act.

About 15 Palestinians have been arrested in the last few days on suspicion of arson and attempted arson in the West Bank. At least 10 are still held by the Shin Bet, while several others have been released after it was shown that they had no connection to the fires.

On Saturday, four Palestinians were arrested in relation to the fires. One was arrested near Umm Rehan, after a drone spotted a group of Palestinians setting fire in the area. Troops pursued the group and apprehended one of them. Near Ariel, three Palestinians were arrested after they were spotted trying to set fire in an open field.

In some cases, IDF forces take footage of suspected arsonists in the act, and then try to follow their escape route and apprehend them. A video released by the military shows how a drone is used to help locate arson suspects. "He has a backpack," a drone operator is heard repeating in the video. "Robot, just confirm that you see my image," he says, before using the aircraft to direct forces toward the suspect. (Gili Cohen)

Public Security Minister Gilad Erdan says that the homes of politically motivated arsonists should be demolished.

Speaking to Channel 2, Erdan described recent cases of arson as "a new type of terrorism."

The wreckage of Rama's Kitchen restaurant in Nataf, near Jerusalem, after it was consumed by fire, November 26, 2016.
Emil Salman

He said that the same incitement and hatred that motivates stabbings and car-ramming attacks is pushing assailants to set fires.

Therefore, he said, these acts should be fought with the same "proven tools" that Israel uses in other cases of terrorism, including the demolition of houses.

"There is no difference," he said. "If it is possible to destroy the home of a terrorist who carried out a shooting or a stabbing, we should also destroy the home of an arsonist who confessed to have done so on political grounds, or if there is evidence to that effect."

The Be'er Sheva Magistrate's Court has decided to keep in custory a Bedouin Israeli arrested Friday for two Facebook posts criticizing Arabs who were celebrating the fires in Israel online. Police argued in court that the posts could have been misunderstood as encouragement to set fires.

Anas Abudaabes, 29, argued that police hadn't translated his posts correctly and that they represented satire and criticism against those who see the fires as punishment from God.

The suspect's attorney said they would appeal the decision to extend his detention to the district court. (Jack Khoury)

The fire that burned in the town of Beit Meir outside of Jerusalem on Thursday night was ignited by a flare fired by Israeli border guard troops during a chase near the town. Ten homes burned during the fire and all of the residents were evacuated to the neighboring town of Shoresh.

Overnight between Thursday and Friday, two suspicious individuals were seen in an open area near Beit Meir. They fled the area after Israeli border guard troops arrived at the scene and the soldiers fired the flare for light in the ensuing chase. The two were caught and their remand was extended Friday by six days.

One Beit Meir resident, Reut Ben-Atar, a mother of four, recounted: “We were awaked at 2:10 A.M. to screams of ‘Get out! Everything’s on fire!’ We opened the door and the smoke was choking us, and a lot of sparks were flying. The only thing that we did was grab the children and run to the car …, but at the entrance to the moshav, it was all fire and we couldn’t leave. You saw the flames coming closer in seconds. We felt like sitting ducks. We felt like the Carmel disaster,” she said referring to the 2010 fire in the Carmel forest that killed 44 people, most of whom were in one bus that was engulfed in flames. “After half an hour, we were ordered out in a convoy.” (Nir Hasson)

Palestinian firefighters have gained control over some 200 separate fires in the West Bank that erupted over the last few days alongside the wave of blazes that spread across Israel, according to the spokesman for the Palestinian firefighter's service, Raid al-Aza. Most of the fires were located in farmland and small wooded areas and burned hundreds of acres in total.

Al-Aza told Haaretz that the two biggest fires were in the area of Nablus and in the towns around Ramallah and that none were injured. "We have to differentiate between apartment or building fires that occur as a result of an electrical shortage or human error and fires in forests and farms. Fires in apartments happen every day, but because of the events in Israel, we're now looking at every incident as irregular," he said.

According to al-Aza, firefighter crews in the West Bank rely on volunteers. "As everyone knows, we don't have air support and sometimes we have to pump water from wells." he said. Fires have also burned in the last few days in Jordan, Lebanon, Turkey and Egypt due to weather conditions. (Jack Khoury)

Firefighters suspect that the fire at the West Bank settlement of Halamish was caused by arson. The blaze, which saw some 350 families evacuated and was resurgent Friday after being brought under control, has once again been brought under control.

More than 1,000 residents of the settlement were evacuated from their homes because of the fire and 17 homes were completely destroyed by the flames while several other building suffered various levels of damage. Two residents were lightly injured as they were evacuated. (Yotam Berger)

Israeli police are currently holding 23 individuals suspected of arson or incitement to commit arson. More than 30 suspects have been questioned by police since the first fires broke out. Earlier Saturday, the Israeli army said that more than 10 Palestinian suspects had been arrested and handed to the Shin Bet for further investigations.

An Israeli Bedouin was arrested on Thursday for a Facebook post criticizing Arabs who were celebrating the fires in Israel online. Police argued that the posts could have been misunderstood as encouragement to set fires.

Earlier, fire resurged in wooded areas near the West Bank settlement of Halamish. Some 350 families have been evacuated from the settlement; 15 houses have collapsed as result of the fire and 25 others were damaged, as was the power system. (Yotam Berger)

Over ten arson suspects have been arrested in investigations into the fires across Israel over the last few days, according to the Israeli army. The suspects have been handed over to the Shin Bet for questioning.

According to the army, Israeli soldiers arrested three of the suspects overnight near the West Bank town of Dayr Qadis near Modi'in. The three were in a car where soldiers also found an empty bottle of gasoline along with two full ones, a bag filled with cloth, gloves and lighters.

Israeli soldiers, alongside police officers, later took another suspect into custody after an employee of the Israel Nature and Parks Authority saw him trying to set fire to brush near the West Bank town of Battir, near Jerusalem. The suspect is also a resident of Battir. (Gili Cohen and Almog Ben Zikri)

Arson suspect Katosh as seen trying to set fire to brush near the West Bank town of Battir on Saturday, November 26, 2016.
Israel Nature and Parks Authority

Palestinian firefighter forces, who entered Israel to help battle the ongoing brush-fires in the Jerusalem area, have completed their mission and will return to the West Bank in a few hours, rescue officials told Haaretz.

Earlier on Saturday, the head of the Palestinian firefighting force, Nasser Yossef, visited with his forces who were working in Nave Ilan and Nataf. He then met with his Israeli counterpart.

Israel's Nature and Parks Authority say that their rangers spotted a Palestinian from the village of Battir attempting to start a fire near Rephaim Stream, south west to Jerusalem. He was arrested by police forces and taken into custody. (Zafrir Rinat)

Fires continued to burn in different parts of Israel Saturday morning, with 350 Israelis being evacuated from the West Bank settlement of Halamish, where the blaze destroyed 15 homes and damaged 25 more. It took over 20 firefighting crews to put the fire in Halamish under partial control.

In Haifa, the fire was all but subdued, and forces battled only a number of small fires overnight. Residents of the northern community of Harashim were allowed to return to their homes after the fire in the Galilee region was also contained.

Saturday morning also saw some 69 firefighting forces from Cyprus arrive in Israel to help quell the brushfires. (Yotam Berger, Nir Hasson and Jack Khoury)

Damage caused by brush-fire to house in West Bank settlement of Halamish. November 26, 2016.
Fire and Rescue Services

A man and woman in their 20s and a women in her 50s sustained serious injuries when a fire broke out in a four-story apartment building in Ma'ale Adumim, near Jerusalem. Nine others, including a 4-month-old baby, sustained mild injuries as a result of the fire. Firefighters have since put out the fire.

Two of the nine who sustained mild injuries were 16-year-olds who injured themselves fleeing the building. The other five injuries were the result of smoke exposure. They were treated by first responders on the scene and rushed to Jerusalem hospitals for further treatment.

"We saw an apartment building filled with thick smoke," a first responder described his experiences on the scene, "entering the hallway was impossible, and people were screaming for help. The firefighters arrived with a crane and ladders and evacuated people suffering from exposure to smoke to our care. A young man and young woman in their 20s were unconscious, and we administered life-saving medical treatment, which included CPR. We evacuated them to the hospital for further treatment in serious condition, sedated and ventilated. Ten additional residents, who inhaled smoke, were also treated by our teams, among them a baby of about four months and two teenagers of about 16, who injured themselves, while escaping the heavy smoke." (Yotam Berger)

A satirical Facebook posts about the fire crisis has landed an Israeli Bedouin in jail.

Anas Abudaabes, 29, an activist from the southern Israeli town of Rahat, was arrested on Thursday after posting two messages critical of Arabs who see the fires plaguing Israel as punishment for a bill that seeks to silence mosque loudspeakers. Abudaabes says the police mistranslated one of his posts, reaching the mistaken conclusion that he encouraged on Arabs to set fires.Read more

A fire raging in the West Bank has spread into the Israeli settlement Halamish. 10 houses caught fire, and one woman sustained light injuries. Over 1,000 residents are being evacuated from their homes. Police officers and firefighters are on the scene. The settlement's electrical infrastructure was damaged. (Yaniv Kubovich, Yotam Berger)

Some 60 firefighting crews managed to push back the flames near Nataf outside Jerusalem. According to fire official, the flames were under control and subsiding in most areas.

However, it was decided not to let residents go back to their homes, as it was still possible that weather conditions and winds could reignite the flames.

While most of the town has evacuated, a few dozen residents have stayed behind to assist in the firefighting efforts. One of them, Nataf's chairman Rami Matan, told Haaretz: "The wind is constantly tricking us. I'm on the porch seeing the flames getting near, I hope it won't draw any closer. The flames are very high, the mountain is enveloped in a carpet of fire. I've never seen anything like it."

Many firefighting crews from across Israel have arrived at the area, as well as Palestinian crews from Ramallah. "Firefighters are one big family, there's no difference," said Udi Gal, a firefighter and the spokesman for the firefighting services in Jerusalem.

Airtankers will resume their activities in the area only at dawn. An IDF helicopter is on standby in order to evacuate residents in case the roads close.

Earlier, Rama's Kitchen, a well-known restaurant just outside the town, was burned to the ground.

Maya Ben Zvi, the restaurant owner, said that they tried to put out a fire near the restaurant but didn't have enough water pressure. "We saw the tree burn and set fire to the entire restaurant," she told Channel 2. When the fire approached, they evacuated the customers. "We told them to get out, when the place caught fire we ran. We're all in pain over the life work that was incinerated in a second." (Nir Hasson)

Israel fire: Firefighters helps extinguish a new blaze that broke out in the town of Nataf, west of Jerusalem, on November 25, 2016.
Ahmad Gharabli, AFP

The American "supertanker" plane, the largest aerial firefighting aircraft in the world, lands in Israel to help put out the blazes raging across the country.

Senior rescue services officials say that the aircraft's arrival is unnecessary. "This is a matter of politics and less of an operational need. We weren't given the opportunity to express ourselves on the matter," said one official.

Some 60,000 residents return to Haifa after firefighters quell blazes. According to city hall, 110 buildings were damaged, 42 of which were deemed too dangerous to approach. Some 860 apartments were damaged in the fire. (Noa Shpigel)

The Israel Air Force is using 10 drones to find suspected arsonists and fires.

A video released by the military shows how a drone is used to help locate arson suspects. "He has a backpack," a drone operator is heard repeating in the video. "Robot, just confirm that you see my image," he says, before using the aircraft to direct forces toward the suspect.

Meanwhile, air tankers that have arrived from Turkey, Russia, Croatia, Cyprus and Italy are operating to help put out the flames. After completing a mission, the planes refuel and restock fire retardants at the Hatzor air base in southern Israel, before taking off again. An Israeli pilot has been assigned to each foreign plane to ease coordination. (Gili Cohen)

A major fire has broken out near Ma'ale Hahamisha and Nataf, in the Judean Hills, west of Jerusalem.

Fire officials suspect that the blaze was caused by a firebomb thrown from a Palestinian village, Katane, which is beyond the security barrier. Thirty firefighting crews and 20 air tankers have been dispatched to the area.

Several areas are ablaze in the West Bank as well. Fires have broken out near the settlements of Dolev, Shaked and Yitzhar. (Nir Hasson)

Fire in Israel: A firefighter inspects the damages in Beit Meir, a village in the hills west of Jerusalem, Israel, November 25, 2016.
Ahmad Gharabli, AFP
A fire is seen blazing near Jerusalem from Modi'in, Israel, November 25, 2016.
N/A

Public Security Minister Gilad Erdan says several arrests have been made in connection to the fires across the country, in addition to the 13 arrested that were reported on Thursday.

Investigators are having trouble determine what caused the fires as the flames destroy the evidence.

"All it takes is a little match," says Ran Shelef, the head of Israel's fire investigation unit. "You don't need flammable substances or any special torching device."

On Thursday, investigators managed to determine that at least some of the fires were intentional, although they did not have unequivocal proof. In the best case scenarios, witnesses, videos, wind direction and objects help investigators put the puzzle together. "In other cases, there is no explanation," Shelef says. " ... We will only be able to tell following a thorough investigation. We are very careful." (Ilan Lior)

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said in a press conference that "anyone who tries to burn the State of Israel will be severely punished."

Netanyahu made the remarks after holding an operational meeting in the Hatzor airbase in southern Israel and speaking with Israeli and foreign air tanker pilots. The prime minister said additional tankers are on their way. "We have given aid to other countries in the past and now we are getting help from them in return," he said.

Netanyahu said that there is "no doubt" that arson is at play in some of the fires that have broken out across the country but noted that it is unknown how many of the fires were caused intentionally.

"Anyone who tries to burn the State of Israel will be punished severely ... " he said. "Crime has a price. Arson terrorism has a price, and we will make sure to collect. There are fundamentals of terrorism here, there is absolutely no doubt." He noted that it is as yet unclear whether the incidents were coordinated. (Barak Ravid)

A new fire has erupted next to the town of Yad in the lower Galilee region where 15 homes have been evacuated and no injuries have been reported. Yet another fire has broken out north of the settlement of Yitzhar in the West Bank.

At the town of Harashim, firefighters are struggling in heavy winds to hold back flames that have come within 300 meters of housing. Highway 864 leading into the two has been blocked to traffic and all residents have been evacuated. (Noa Shpigel and Jack Khoury)

A firefighting plane flies over the northern Israeli town of Harashim on Friday, November 25, 2016.
Gil Eliahu

Police have announced that the residents of six separate Haifa neighborhoods, Ramat Alon, Ramat Remez, Ramat Golda, Ramat Begin, Ramot Chen and Ramat Almogi - excluding Einstein Street which will remain closed - can return to their homes after being evacuated. (Noa Shpigel)

Public Security Minister Gilad Erdan said that evidence has been found that the initial fire that broke out in Zikron Ya'akov and burned 30 homes was the result of arson. "We found gasoline in Zikron," Erdan told Army radio in an interview.

According to the minister, "At the moment we are focused on saving lives, there's no time to completely investigate all of the incidents. However, rescue and fire workers have decades of experience ... and the consencus is that this is arson."

Erdan also said that the army had been contacted for help via use of unmanned drones and that this cooperation led to the arrest of one arson suspect in Beit Meir near Jerusalem.

Flames in Haifa's neighborhood of Ramat Eshkol have rebounded and two firefighting planes from Croatia are leading the operations to extinguish the fire in the area. In the neighborhood of Denya however, police told residents that they can now return to their homes.

According to the municipality, 37 homes in Haifa have been severely damaged. Separately, a fire in Harashim north of Carmiel is still burning out of control and some of the town's residents have been evacuated, though homes in the area aren't considered to be in any danger. (Noa Shpigel)

In light of improving conditions in Haifa's fire, the amount of forces in the area will be reduced in the coming hours. 35 teams are expected to remain, including four offered as aid from the Palestinian Authority and multiple firefighting planes. Police stressed Friday morning however, that residents who were evacuated are still not permitted to return to their homes. Israel's Electric Corporation said that 700 homes remain without electricity in Haifa.

Police have arrested a second suspect in the fire in Beit Meir near Jerusalem. A team from Israel's Environmental Protection Ministry is expected to test the air quality in the hills near Jerusalem over concerns of pollution from buildings containing asbestos that burned in the area. The ministry does not expect that residents will be allowed to return home on Friday. The fire in the area is being fed by strong winds and firefighters are focusing their efforts to prevent the flames from reaching a gas station and construction site of Israel Railways.

A resident of Rahat was arrested Thursday accused of posting incitement on Facebook. He has appeared in court for a hearing to extend his remand. (Noa Shpigel, Nir Hasson and Almog Ben Zikri)

Firefighters battle a blaze in Beit Meir near Jerusalem on Friday, November 25, 2016.
Olivier Fitoussi

There’s no point being wise after the fact. The warnings were there, and were updated again after pretentious plans were supposedly put in place. The results are scorched into Israel’s towns and hillsides. Benjamin Netanyahu, who was apportioned the major responsibility for the lack of preparedness of Israel’s firefighting services during the deadly Mount Carmel fire in 2010 by State Comptroller Micha Lindenstrauss, wasted the following six years in fitful empty gestures. Who will he blame now, what will he boast about, as he stands like a beggar asking for help from our neighbors?

At least ten homes have caught fire and were severely damaged in the town of Beit Meir near Jerusalem as the blaze there continues to rage out of control. An illegal resident was arrested near the source of the fire. Residents who were evacuated overnight to nearby Shoresh have not yet been allowed to return to their homes.

Meanwhile, firefighters report that the fire in Haifa calmed down overnight. Rescue workers left in the area are spread out to prevent a revival of the fire as they work to extinguish what remains of the fire - an effort that could last for several days. (Noa Shpigel and Nir Hasson)

Fire in Israel: Firefighters battle a blaze in Beit Meir near Jerusalem on Friday, November 25, 2016.
Jerusalem Fire and Rescue

The fire in the Judean Hills grew stronger on Thursday night. Large firefighting forces were attempting to prevent it from spreading.

Another fire, near the northern community of Upper Nazareth, also grew stronger.

Weather conditions over the weekend are not expected to bode well with the firefighters. The eastern winds that fanned the fires are expected to continue to blow on Friday, but will weaken toward nighttime.

Israel has accepted an offer by the Palestinian Authority to send four firefighting teams to help combat the blazes, a senior official said. The Coordinator of Government Activities in the Territories is now overseeing the cooperation between Palestinian fire trucks and Israeli fire crews.

The images of fires blazing out of control, huge plumes of smoke in the sky and homes burnt to the ground have struck horror in the hearts of many Israelis in recent days. In part, because the scenes are all too familiar.

Nearly 9,000 dunams (2,224 acres) have been burned in the fires across Israel, in the bieggest natural disaster in the country in terms of land involved since the Carmel fires of 2010, according to a JNF estimate.

Fires continue to spread in the areas of Canada Park and Sha'ar HaGai near Jerusalem. Access to these areas is limited and no progress in expected to be made there overnight. Many firefighters and other rescue workers are at the scenes to defend roads, towns and a gas station in Sha'ar HaGai, but no firefighting activities are currently taking place. (Tzafrir Rinat)

Firefighters working into the late evening near Haifa on Thursday, November 24, 2016.
Moti Milrod

Public Security Minister Gilad Erdan told Channel 2 News that the fires across Israel "are under control." According to him, "The statements about the arson are statements that are backed up by professional sources from the Fire and Rescue Authority. But it must be understood that the efforts of the last two days are not investigations but life-saving efforts - and so we need to remember that these are initial evaluations.

In a subsequent interview with Channel 10, Erdan said that eight individuals had been arrested and that the arson was suspected of being politically motivated.

Four Arabs were arrested Thursday morning, suspected of arson. The investigation moved forward as suspected negligent arson, but in the end, the four were released after it proved that they weren't involved with the fires. (Yaniv Kubovitch)

Haifa municipality has announced that several neighborhoods will remain without electricity overnight and at least through Friday morning, including Ramat Chen, Ramat Sapir, Ramat Almogi, Ramat Begin, Ramat Golda, Hurav and Romema.

Firefighters in the area of Ein Hod successfully extinguished the fire that erupted there.

Meanwhile, a firefighting plane from Turkey has landed in Israel. (Noa Shpigel and Gili Cohen)

A fire blazes in Haifa on Thursday, November 24, 2016.
Gil Eliahu
Firefighters combat a fire at a home in Haifa on Thursday, November 24, 2016.
Ofer Vaknin

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has ordered the Foreign Ministry to contact the American company that operates the "Supertanker," a massive firefighting plane, to discuss the possibility of bringing it to Israel to help handle the wave of fires that have spread across the country, according to a senior source.

A Foreign Ministry spokesman confirmed Netanyahu's request and said that an agreement had been reached that would see the supertanker arrive in Israel within 28 hours.

The Supertanker is a Boeing 747 outfitted with technology to act as a firefighting plane. It was first brought to Israel to fight the massive fire in Carmel in 2010. (Barak Ravid)

U.S. Evergreen 747 supertanker sprays over an area in Ein Hod in the Carmel Forest in the outskirts of Haifa on December 5, 2010
Jack Guez, AFP

Several homes were set alite in a fire in the central Israeli town of Nirit, that has subsequently been extinguished. No injuries were reported.

The entrance to the town, which has been without electricty, was blocked off and a center to receive evacuated families was set up in the neighboring town of Matan.

The Sha'ar HaNegev Regional Council has invited residents of the north who were forced to evacuate their homes to stay with host families in the south. Those interested in participating are asked to call 03-6925331. (Lee Yaron and Almog Ben Zikri)

A home burned in a fire that engulfed residential neighborhoods of Haifa on Thursday, November 24, 2016.
Ofer Vaknin